adventures in the new and the old

Monthly Archives: October 2016

I have to admit writing this post feels a bit “old skool”. Prior to the last week I can’t remember the last time I had to break out a Windows Service to solve anything. Regardless, for one cloud-based IaaS project I’m working on I needed a simple worker-type solution that was private and could post data to a private REST API hosted on the other end of an Azure VNet Peer.

While I could have solved this problem any number of ways I plumped for Windows Service primarily because it will be familiar to developers and administrators at the organisation I’m working with, but I figured if I’m going to have to deploy onto VMs I’m sure not deploying in an old-fashioned way! Luckily we’re already running in Azure and hosting on VSTS so I have access to all the tools I need!

Once you have the basics in place (it only takes a matter of minutes to prepare each machine) you can head back here to cover off the changes you need to make.

Note: this process is going to assume you have a Windows Service Project in Visual Studio 2015 that is being built using VSTS’s in-built build infrastructure. If you have other configurations you may need to take different steps to get this to work 🙂

Tweak build artefact output

First we need to make sure that the outputs from our build are stored as artefacts in VSTS. I didn’t use any form of installer packaging here so I needed to ensure my build outputs were all copied to the “drops” folder.

Here is my build definition which is pretty vanilla:

The tweak I made was on the Visual Studio build step (step 2) where I defined an additional MSBuild Argument that set the OutputPath to be the VSTS build agent’s artifacts directory which will automatically be copied by the Publish Artifacts step:

If I look at a history entry for my CI build and select Artifacts I can see that my Windows Service binary and all its associated assemblies, config files (and importantly Deployment Script) are stored with the build.

Now we have the build in the right configuration let’s move on to the deployment.

Deploying a Service

This is actually easier than it used to be :). Many of us would remember the need to package the Windows Service into an MSI and then use InstallUtil.exe to do the install on deployment.

We can combine these handy Cmdlets in our Deployment script to manage the installation of our Windows Service as shown below.

The Release Management definition remains unchanged – all we had to do was ensure our build outputs were available to copy from the ‘Drop’ folder on the build and that they are copied to C:\temp\ on the target VM(s). Our Desployment Script takes care of the rest!

That’s it! Next time your CI build passes your CD kicks in and your Windows Service will be updated on your target VMs!